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         Ginsberg Allen:     more books (100)
  1. The Beat Book: Writings from the Beat Generation
  2. Deliberate Prose: Selected Essays 1952-1995 by Allen Ginsberg, 2001-04-01
  3. Howl by Allen Ginsberg, Barry Miles, 1995-04-26
  4. Iron Horse by Allen Ginsberg, 1974
  5. The Selected Letters of Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder, 1956-1991 by Gary Snyder, Allen Ginsberg, 2008-11-25
  6. HOWL of the Censor: The Four Letter Word on Trial Containing the Poem of Controversy HOWL By Allen Ginsberg by J.W. Ed. Ehrlich, 1956
  7. Journals Mid-Fifties 1954-1958: Allen Ginsberg ; Edited by Gordon Ball by Allen Ginsberg, Gordon Ball, 1995-04
  8. Allen Ginsberg in America: With a New Introduction by the Author by Jane Kramer, 1997-10
  9. The Late Great Allen Ginsberg: A Photo Biography by Christopher Felver, 2003-02-01
  10. Allen Ginsberg's Buddhist Poetics by Tony Trigilio, 2007-06-19
  11. Poems all over the place, mostly 'seventies by Allen Ginsberg, 1978
  12. Allen Verbatim: Lectures on Poetry, Politics, Consciousness by Allen Ginsberg, 1974
  13. Screaming with Joy: The Life of Allen Ginsberg by Graham Caveney, 1999-10-19
  14. Composed on the Tongue by Allen Ginsberg, 2001-01-01

41. Allen Ginsberg
An selective internet bibliography for poet allen ginsberg, from literaryhistory.com.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/Ginsberg.htm
Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997)
A selective bibliography of open access articles on Allen Ginsberg, favoring signed articles by recognized scholars, articles published in reviewed sources, and web sites that adhere to the MLA Guidelines for Authors of Web Sites
main page 20th century poetry 20th century authors 19th century authors ... about LiteraryHistory
Literary Criticism
Augustine, Jane. On the influence of Zen and Asian intellectual, religious and cultural ideas on Diane diPrima, Allen Ginsberg, Denise Levertov and Anne Waldman, from a talk at the Conference on Contemporary Poetry, Rutgers, 1997 (removed) Bernstein, Charles. A short talk on T.S. Eliot and Allen Ginsberg, in which Bernstein opines that it did neither poet a service that Eliot became the poet who symbolized the closed and repressed, just as Ginsberg became the symbol of the open, the uncloseted, the anti-authoritarian. From the Conference on Contemporary Poetry, Rutgers, 1997 (removed) Burt, Stephen. "The Paradox of Howl: The anti-establishment poem's debt to the established past." Slate, 4/19/06 Charters, Ann.

42. Glbtq >> Literature >> Ginsberg, Allen
The forthrightly gay allen ginsberg is probably the bestknown American poet to emerge in the post-World War II period.
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/ginsberg_a.html
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Ginsberg, Allen (1926-1997) Probably the best-known U.S. poet to emerge in the post-World War II period, Allen Ginsberg entered public awareness with the controversy over his first book, Howl and Other Poems (1956). A sharp denunciation of America's cultural temper during the Cold War, the volume included extremely frank celebration of the libido in all its manifestations, including the homoerotic Throughout numerous later works, Ginsberg has embodied varied aspects of the counterculture: pacifism, drug experimentation, sexual liberation, hostility to bureaucracy (both capitalist and Communist), and openness to Eastern religions. Sponsor Message.
In his earliest writing, Ginsberg imitated the metaphysical poetry of Andrew Marvell and John Donne. Through romantic relationships with fellow Beat Generation figures Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughsand with the help of a therapist who encouraged Ginsberg to accept his sexualitythe poet began to draw on personal experience in his work. He abandoned strict verse forms, instead producing rapidly written, uncensored compositions. These poems somewhat resemble the work of Walt Whitman, with their use of anaphora and their extensive catalogues; but their diction probably owes more to the "spontaneous bop prosody" of Kerouac's novels.

43. Allen Ginsberg
see also my CD Studies and MontagePieces (2004) (with voice samples of allen ginsberg and Jack Kerouac) for piano, digital piano, electronics,
http://www.lichtensteiger.de/ginsberg.html
born in 1926 in Newark, NJ; died April 5, 1997, East Village, New York City) The visionary poet and founding father of the Beat generation inspired the American counterculture of the second half of the 20th century with groundbreaking poems such as "Howl" and "Kaddish." Among the avant-garde he was considered a spiritual and sexually liberated ambassador for tolerance and enlightenment. With an energetic and loving personality, Ginsberg used poetry for both personal expression and in his fight for a more interesting and open society. Howl is a poem by Allen Ginsberg that was first performed in 1955 in the Six Gallery in San Francisco. "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked, dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix, angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night, who poverty and tatters and hollow-eyed high sat up smoking in the supernatural darkness of cold-water flats floating across the tops of cities contemplating jazz (...)" Excerpt from HOWL see also my CD: Studies and Montage-Pieces (2004) for piano, digital piano, electronics, percussion, digital percussion, claves, double bass, violin, pedal harmonium, flute, cymbals, radio, homemade instruments, toys, cardboard horns, gurgle shells and sampler

44. Eric Drooker
Biography by allen ginsberg. www.allenginsberg.org. December 28, 1995 Drooker and ginsberg in allen s kitchen on East 12th Street, New York City
http://www.drooker.com/bio/ginsberg.html
Biography by Allen Ginsberg
www.allenginsberg.org December 28, 1995 The Housetop: A Night Piece (July 1863). I began collecting Drooker's posters soon after overcoming shock, seeing in contemporary images the same dangerous class conflict I'd remembered from childhood, pre-Hitler block print wordless novels by Frans Masereel and Lynd Ward. Ward's images of the solitary artist dwarfed by the canyons of a Wall Street Megalopolis lay shadowed behind my own vision of Moloch. What "shocked" me in Drooker's scratchboard prints was his graphic illustration of economic crisis similar to Weimar-American 1930's Depressions. ". . . It is a question of genuine values, human worth, trustworthiness," Thomas Mann commented, introducing Frans Masereel's novel in woodcuts Passionate Journey 1970's he attended Henry Street Settlement art classes, graduated from Cooper Union, moved permanently to East 10th Street close to Tompkins Park. Following family tradition he organized rent strikes, supported local squats and tenant organizing against police brutality. By 1980's working as freelance artist for many leftist groups, with reputation as radical street art-provocateur, he was arrested and thrown in District of Columbia jail for postering. In "denial" of economic crisis, city bureaucrats cracked down on Punk and political postering as a "public nuisance." Xeroxed flyers were considered "illegal graffiti." By 1990's observant Op-ed editors at The New York Times invited him to contribute art for their pages, as did

45. Allen Ginsberg, Mostly Sitting Haiku + 221 Syllables At Rocky Mountain Dharma Ce
I meet the poet allen ginsberg at a Vienna cafe. He has hidden himself . A Chronology of the Life and Times of allen ginsberg
http://www.terebess.hu/english/haiku/aginsberg.html
Terebess Asia Online (TAO)
Index

Home
Allen Ginsberg
Haiku Mostly Sitting Haiku 221 Syllables at Rocky Mountain Dharma Center Haiku (Never Published) Allen Ginsberg Death Notes
by Andrew Schelling The Prajna Paramita Sutra
as translated by Allen Ginsberg

Haiku objective images written down outside mind
the result is inevitable mind sensation of relations.
Never try to write of relations themselves just the images
which are all that can be written down on the subject. - Allen Ginsberg Allen Ginsberg
Mostly Sitting Haiku 1st ed. (Xtras, no. 6) Paterson, N.J.: From Here Press, 1978. Allen Ginsberg White Shroud: Poems 1980-1985 Harper and Row, 1986. 221 Syllables at Rocky Mountain Dharma Center
[13 Haiku on p. 41.] Headless husk legs wrapped round a grass spear, an old bee trembles in sunlight. Since yesterday noon two Brown-eyed Susans stand before the outhouse door. Tail turned to red sunset high on a spruce crown one lone chickadee tweets. Put on my shirt and took it off in the sun walking the path to lunch. A dandelion seed floats above the marsh grass with the mosquitos.

46. Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication To Allen Ginsberg
In this historymaking transatlantic poetic happening, celebrating allen ginsberg and his epic poem HOWL, poets performed at venues in London, Paris,
http://arts.internet2.edu/howl.html
Membership Network Communities Services ... Government
Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication to Allen Ginsberg 14 October 2004 In this history-making transatlantic poetic happening, celebrating Allen Ginsberg and his epic poem HOWL, poets performed at venues in London, Paris, and across the United States. These live poetry readings and poetic theatre pieces were simultaneously streamed across JANET, Renater, and Internet2 advanced networks. Streaming video and audio allowed audiences at each site to not only observe readings on location, but to experience the art of poetry in remote theaters as well. While Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication to Allen Ginsberg was streamed, anyone from Calcutta to Caracas with broadband access was able to watch the entire poetry reading as it happened. If you have any questions about Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication to Allen Ginsberg adoyle@internet2.edu mckite@indra.com
Program

Netcast Archive
...
Acknowledgements
Program
The program for Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication to Allen Ginsberg

47. Internet Archive: Details: Allen Ginsberg Performing William Blake.
A reading by allen ginsberg performing William Blake s Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. Songs of Innocence includes The Shepherd, The Echoing
http://www.archive.org/details/naropa_allen_ginsberg_performing
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Ginsberg, Allen Allen Ginsberg performing William Blake. (July 1, 1979)
embedding and help A reading by Allen Ginsberg performing William Blake's Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. Songs of Innocence includes: "The Shepherd," "The Echoing Green," "The Lamb," "The Little Black Boy," "The Blossom," "The Chimney Sweeper," "The Little Boy Lost," "The Little Boy Found," "Laughing Song," and "Holy Thursday." Songs of Experience includes: "Nurse's Song," "The Sick Rose," "Ah Sunflower," "The Garden of Love," "London," "The Human Abstract," "To Tirzah" and "The Grey Monk."

48. Allen Ginsberg 1976 New Age Interview By Peter Barry Chowka: I Of II
allen ginsberg Not so much. Occasionally, I still write travel poems in airplanes, but not as often. It might be that the times have changed.
http://members.aol.com/pbchowka/ginsberg76a.html
This is Allen Ginsberg?
The 1976 New Age Interview by Peter Barry Chowka
Ginsberg speaks his mind on:
Tibetan Buddhism, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche,
politics, poetry, and the future of America. Peter Barry Chowka originally published as the cover story in New Age Journal , April 1976. Headlines (above) are from the original cover.
Allen Ginsberg at his desk E. 12th. Street NYC February 1976
Click here
to read the original Introduction from the April 1976 New Age Journal Interview Peter Barry Chowka : Allen, since we're in this automobile setting, I want to ask you: much of your poetry, especially in The Fall of America , was composed in cars on your various travels. In so many of the poems which came out of automobiles in the sixties you really captured the essence of the times, the Vietnam war reports on the radio, the lyrics of the rock music happening then. I wonder if, lately, you're writing poetry while on the road in automobiles? Allen Ginsberg : Not so much. Occasionally, I still write travel poems in airplanes, but not as often. It might be that the times have changed. Also, we were doing a lot of cross country traveling in cars in the early and mid-sixties. More than now. PBC : A lot of your most recent poetry, especially some that you read last night (Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D.C.) contains very spiritual, and specifically Buddhist, imagery.

49. Calling Allen Ginsberg :: Intervention Magazine :: War, Politics, Culture
We still need you, allen ginsberg, son of Blake Walt Whitman. You shouted your illegal love from Golden Gate bridge. Sang love across the Grand Canyon.
http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1042

50. Electronic Beat 1
This year marks the Twentieth Anniversary of the program and the first week is a kind of mammoth tribute to allen ginsberg, guru of Modern Poetry and
http://www.altx.com/amerika.online/electronic.beat.1.html
Mind Investigations
Mark Amerika
For the next few weeks, I will revolve my Internet column around the month-long activities being held at the Naropa Institute's Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. This year marks the Twentieth Anniversary of the program and the first week is a kind of mammoth tribute to Allen Ginsberg, guru of Modern Poetry and co-founder of the school. Nestled in the foothills of Boulder, Colorado, where I also happen to make my home, this first week is being called which is interesting to me because at the press conference that Allen held today inside the new Allen Ginsberg Library Building, he was saying: "The Beat Movement was never meant to be a rebellion. It was meant to bring in a new consciousness. The middle-class, who were rebelling against Mother Nature by destroying her ecologically, made us out to be rebellious." This was pure Ginsbergian wisdom dripping down the seams of the media outfit that draped the packed conference room. One of the chief lessons I have learned from Ginsberg and that I have tried to apply to my own upstart writing career is that the whole idea of being the renegade outsider, the literary outlaw, the rowdy disciple, etc., is, for the most part, a myth made up by the repressed middle-working-classes so that they can justify their own participation in the Planetary Work Machine. Ginsberg's genius, for me, is that he has always been able to transmit the kind of compassionate energy that a certain kind of media figure needs if they're going to change Consciousness (big C, meaning the whole she-bang, Everybody, the society of Potential Artists).

51. Guide To The Allen Ginsberg Papers
ginsberg, allen. Collection Size ca. 1000 linear ft. Repository Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives.
http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/tf5c6004hb/?&query=audio &query-join=or§

52. Allen Ginsberg - Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Poems And Songs 1949-1993
The name allen ginsberg conjures up memories of a young beat poet who, along with Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs, began a fledgling movement in the
http://www.glasspages.org/holysoul.html
DiscoGlassy
Allen Ginsberg
Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Poems and Songs 1949-1993
Cover Picture
References
  • Rhino Word Beat R2 71693 (4 CDs, 1994, USA).
Credits
  • Produced by: Hal Willner. Executive Producer: Allen Ginsberg. Co-Executive Producer: James Austin. Associate Producer: Bob Rosenthal. Research: Patrick Milligan, Gary Peterson. Project Assistance: Michael Johnson, Stephen K. Peeples, Stephen Ronan, Darcy Sullivan. Digitally Remastered by: Bob Fisher / Digital Domain. Art Direction: Geoff Gans, Coco Shinomiya. Design: N. Kellerhouse.
Tracks
  • CD Vol. 1: Moloch! (1:16:48). Walking at Night in Key West (0:46).
      Words by Allen Ginsberg. Written in Key West, Dec. 1953. ALLEN GINSBERG: vocal. Recorded at Neal Cassady's home, San Jose, summer 1954. Previously unreleased.
    A Mad Gleam (0:34).
      Words by Allen Ginsberg. Written in New York City, Jan. 1949. ALLEN GINSBERG: voice. (Symphony Sid radio broadcast in background). Recorded at John Clellon Holmes's apartment, New York City, 1949. Previously unreleased.
    The Green Automobile (10:50).
      Words by Allen Ginsberg.

53. Nextbook: Prophet, Nudnik, Beatnik, Freak
allen ginsberg wanted to be a star, but his mysticism, aggression, In describing allen ginsberg, it s tempting to parody Howl s long lines,
http://www.nextbook.org/cultural/feature.html?id=464

54. EPC/Allen Ginsberg Author Home Page
About the Author; Modern American Poetry Page allen ginsberg at the Academy of American Poets. Page edited by the EPC (July 2000)
http://epc.buffalo.edu/authors/ginsberg/
Photo credit: http://www.naropa.edu/ginsphotos.html
Allen Ginsberg AllenGinsberg.org
Online Works Send a Comment Search Home Electronic Poetry Center ( http://epc.buffalo.edu

55. Allen Ginsberg Redux
Filmmaker Jerry Aronson met allen ginsberg in Chicago at the 1968 Democratic Convention protests and then later in Boulder, Colorado where each of the men
http://contemporarylit.about.com/b/2007/07/17/allen-ginsberg-redux.htm
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Allen Ginsberg Redux
Filmmaker Jerry Aronson met Allen Ginsberg in Chicago at the 1968 Democratic Convention protests and then later in Boulder, Colorado where each of the men had relocated in the early '70s. It wasn't until 1983 however that Aronson started the filming The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg , an 85 minute documentary that includes interviews with Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Abbie Hoffman, Ken Kesey, Joan Baez, Norman Mailer, and many others. Aronson's film was released in 1993, but after Ginsberg's death in 1997, the filmmaker set out to update it, adding interviews with a number of artists impacted by Ginsberg and his work, including Andy Warhol, Hunter S. Thompson, Philip Glass, Johnny Depp, Joan Baez, and Bono, to name but a few. The 2 DVD set goes on sale today marking 10 years since the Allen Ginsberg died, and while it's fascinating to listen to the interviews of the artists and musicians who were touched by Ginsberg's work, still more enjoyable I think is revisiting the original 85 minute film in which Ginsberg, in the presence of various interviewers - Dick Cavett, William F. Buckley, and Aronson himself - reads and speaks about his poetry.

56. Six Photographs Of Allen Ginsberg
. . . a haiku by this webpage s author, and a drawing by the poet ginsberg.
http://www.booksmith.com/reader/erikson.html
THE BOOKSMITH READER Six Photographs of Allen Ginsberg /
a haiku /
and one drawing by the poet By Tom Erikson
ALLEN GINSBERG ALLEN GINSBERG ALLEN GINSBERG ALLEN GINSBERG and
ANNE WALDMAN ALLEN GINSBERG ALLEN GINSBERG and
KENWARD ELMSLIE These photographs of Allen Ginsberg were taken in 1993 at The Naropa Institute during the fourth and final week of the summer writing program of The Jack Keroac School of Disembodied Poetics. I had been invited, as an artist in residence, to document the week's activities which culminated in two benefit performances at The Boulder Theatre with Allen Ginsberg, dancer Melissa Finley, and musician Phillip Glass. Ginsberg read Howl in its entirity for the first time in seven years, as well as Kaddish and Plutonium Ode . (The latter accompanied by Phillip Glass on piano.) Allen Ginsberg was the co-founder of The Jack Keroac School Of Disembodied Poetics, with poet Anne Waldman, and was extremely supportive of its growth. Not only did he work to make his two sold out readings extraordinary, but he participated in many of the other week's activities. He lead a workshop with Waldman and Tibetan scholar Gelek Rimpoche titled "Composed on the Tongue," and sat in on several panels and discussion groups, including the final student reading of the summer, at which he was accompanied by long-time companion Peter Orlovsky. He was present as both a standard of poetic accomplishment and a symbolic icon against which the students at Naropa could rebel. He was suffering from the onset of diabedes, among other ailments, and still he gave of himself wholeheartedly.

57. Allen Ginsberg
There is an interview with allen ginsberg in issue 28 of Seconds Magazine. There is a great Literary Kicks page about ginsberg.
http://www.lycaeum.org/~sputnik/People/ginsberg.html
Allen Ginsberg
  • CIA Dope Calypso by Allen Ginsberg.
  • There is an interview with Allen Ginsberg in issue #28 of Seconds Magazine
  • There is a great Literary Kicks page about Ginsberg.
  • You can also read an interview with Ginsberg that was printed in the Fall, 1995 issue of Tricycle : The Buddhist Review.
Search Alta Vista
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http://nepenthes.lycaeum.org/

58. Poetry Foundation: The Online Home Of The Poetry Foundation
allen ginsberg was a distinguished poet who enjoyed a prominent place in .. Gay Sunshine Interview allen ginsberg with allen Young, Grey Fox Press,
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poet.html?id=2547

59. Allen Ginsberg - Howl
allen ginsberg (19261997). Howl. For Carl Solomon I I saw the best minds of my generation .. Transatlantic Howl! A Dedication to allen ginsberg
http://www.wussu.com/poems/agh.htm
poetry anthology writings weed's home page
Howl For Carl Solomon
I
I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked,
dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix,
angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night,
who poverty and tatters and hollow-eyed and high sat up smoking in the supernatural darkness of cold-water flats floating across the tops of cities contemplating jazz,
who bared their brains to Heaven under the El and saw Mohammedan angels staggering on tenement roofs illuminated,
who passed through universities with radiant eyes hallucinating Arkansas and Blake-light tragedy among the scholars of war,
who cowered in unshaven rooms in underwear, burning their money in wastebaskets and listening to the Terror through the wall,
who got busted in their pubic beards returning through Laredo with a belt of marijuana for New York,
who ate fire in paint hotels or drank turpentine in Paradise Alley, death, or purgatoried their torsos night after night with dreams, with drugs, with waking nightmares, alcohol and cock and endless balls

60. Allen Ginsberg In America (Rexroth)
Kenneth Rexroth essay on Beat poet allen ginsberg.
http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth/essays/ginsberg.htm
B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S
Allen Ginsberg in America
At the Howl nabis, Howl, Just as the Ginsberg of ten to fifteen years ago was an hallucination publicitaire Allen Ginsburg in America is a New Yorker New Yorker New Yorker Playboy, New Yorker This is not really to put down Allen Ginsberg in America KENNETH REXROTH
Allen Ginsberg in America originally appeared in the New York Times Book Review (1969) and was reprinted in With Eye and Ear
Other Rexroth Essays
REXROTH ARCHIVE H ome ... earch B ureau of Public Secrets PO B ox B erkeley CA USA
www.bopsecrets.org
knabb@bopsecrets.org

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